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FEATURE ARTICLES

THE ASCENSION SCULPTURE IN THE CHAPEL Laura Dennis, Curator

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A highlight of the College’s art collection is the prominent Chapel sculpture showing the figure of Christ ascending, flanked by two angels. This modern work stands in dramatic contrast to the Victorian Gothic style of the rest of the building, with its detailed woodcarvings and stained glass, and yet the sculpture feels well-suited to the Chapel’s east end. So how did the College come to commission this remarkable sculpture? And who was the pioneering woman artist selected for this important work?

From the late 1940s it was understood that the east end of the Chapel required improvement. The altar had previously been raised, reached by wooden steps, giving an unfortunate cramped appearance. The improvements to the building lowered the altar, and the wall beneath the window was filled with stone slab. The tapestry that had formerly hung on the east wall was, however, far too small for the expanse of stone that was now exposed. It was a case of two steps forward, one step back.

A Committee for the Decoration of the East Wall was established to propose a solution and in August 1954 it submitted a detailed report, setting out some clear recommendations, as well as listing and eliminating various other options. The committee explained that ‘the aim should be to enrich the Chapel by a work of intrinsic artistic value and distinctive character, avoiding the mere imitation of conventional designs’ and that ‘a bold strong feature is needed’. The committee also advised that the solution needed to be three dimensional, made of stone or bronze, not too colourful, and must be permanent. Suggestions of a textile, wooden reredos, mural painting, and lowering the east window were all discounted. A stone reredos was considered, but thought to be too expensive and, in any case, less preferable to their final, firm recommendation of ‘three single figures in stone or metal… one placed under the window and two supporting figures on the wall at either side’. The committee concluded that ‘if executed by a first-rate sculptor it would provide a work of art of distinctive character and not merely an example of competent craftsmanship’.

The College tentatively agreed to the committee’s recommendations. And so the next task was to find this ‘first-rate sculptor’. It was agreed to seek the opinion of Nikolaus Pevsner, the Slade Professor of Fine Art. Earlier that year he had published the Cambridgeshire volume of Buildings of England and so it is unsurprising that his particular expertise was in the forefront of the Fellows’ minds at this time. He dined at Selwyn in January 1955 and over the following weeks reached, independently, the same conclusion as the committee, that ‘sculpted figures’ should be commissioned. He also provided photographic portfolios for five potential candidates and the committee gave a clear recommendation that ‘the most suitable of the five sculptors whose work has been considered is Mrs. Karin Jonzen’.

The fact that Karin Jonzen, a woman artist, was selected by the all-male committee and Fellowship, is no less surprising than her making it onto Pevsner’s shortlist in the first place. As a point of comparison, Newnham was in these same years building its new Principal’s residence, and the sculptors chosen for the project were Geoffrey Clarke and Jacob Epstein. Even today, sculpture carries associations as a masculine artform and in the 1950s this was absolutely the case. Karin Jonzen, born in 1914 in London to Swedish parents, was one of a small number of pioneering women who succeeded in this overwhelmingly male-dominated field, she and Barbara Hepworth being, for example, the only two women sculptors used by the Arts Council in their group of twelve exhibitors for the 1951 Festival of Britain.

Although the College’s selection of a woman sculptor was unconventional, Jonzen’s artistic practice, influenced as it was by the art of ancient Greece and the classical sculpture of the Renaissance, was unwaveringly traditional. This was an era in which abstraction became increasingly fashionable amongst artistic circles, yet Jonzen was steadfast in her dedication to figurative art. Jonzen’s traditional approach was highly appropriate for Selwyn’s brief that required ‘three single figures’ for the Chapel. The commission came at a key moment for the artist, as she had not long recovered from an illness which had required a full year of bed rest. The letter from Cambridge arrived just as she was returning to an art world she described as ‘turning more and more away from the human figure’.

Jonzen approached the project at Selwyn with enthusiasm. The committee were impressed with the sketches of her initial proposals, reporting that she had chosen as her subject the Ascension, and that her designs had been ‘carried out with a marked sense of the religious significance of the subject, and achieve a remarkable feeling of upward movement’. They went on to assert that ‘the whole would undoubtedly form an arresting and dominating feature of the Chapel and would not merely fill the vacant area but complete, both architecturally and in religious meaning, the design of the East

Wall’. They continued by explaining that the location ‘offers the artist an exciting opportunity of giving appropriate treatment to this great Christian theme’, and concluded by recommending that Mrs Jonzen be commissioned to carry out the work. At its meeting, the College recorded that it was ‘favourably disposed’ to Jonzen’s designs, with just a few small doubts focussing on the angels’ clothing and wings.

A visit by the committee to Jonzen’s London studio took place the following month, where discussions about the angels’ ‘voluminous drapery’ and ‘pre-Raphaelite costume’ took place. An amusingly awkward exchange was recorded, where the artist explained that ‘she herself would have preferred simple drapery leaving at least the lower limbs of the angels exposed, but had feared that we might have regarded such exposure as indecorous. We removed this misapprehension.'

In the spring of 1956 Jonzen was formally appointed, with the College Meeting recording that ‘Mrs. Jonzen had signified her gratification’. By February the following year the committee reported that the work was expected to be finished by the Easter vacation. The Bishop of Ely was invited to dedicate the sculpture, which took place, appropriately, on the eve of Ascension Day 1957.

The College chose a photograph of the sculpture as the frontispiece to the 1957-8 issue of the Calendar, proudly describing the work and its dedication by the bishop. The first page of the Calendar’s ‘Notes’ also includes an appraisal by Jack Goodison, the Assistant Director of the Fitzwilliam Museum, who wrote not only of the ‘quality of its sculptural design’ but also of its effectiveness to ‘unite the features of the east wall of the Chapel into a harmonious whole’. The committee had thus succeeded in their task of resolving the issues of the east wall, and in doing so, acquired for the College a striking work of religious art.

The story does not end here, though, as the commission for Selwyn marked a crucial turning point in Jonzen’s career. Soon afterwards, she was invited to participate in the Tate Gallery’s exhibition ‘Contemporary Religious Art’ and won commissions for further ecclesiastical work at St Michael’s Golders Green, Guildford Cathedral and later at the Swedish Church in London. The sculpture she created for the Tate exhibition was acquired by St Mary-le-Bow in the City of London, bringing her to the attention of the Corporation of London and resulting in two further commissions within the square mile. The projects supported Jonzen through a time when, as a woman sculptor working in an unfashionably traditional style, the odds were well and truly stacked against her. The College thus played its own small part in keeping the great tradition of classical sculpture alive. WAR AND PEACE IN COUNTY CLARE Professor John Morrill, Fellow and Emeritus Professor of British and Irish History, provides a précis of his talk to alumni in January 2021 – not, for once, about Cromwell, but about something he stumbled across while holidaying in Ireland…

I had an eventful holiday in a cottage on the moonscape otherwise known as the Burren in County Clare a couple of years ago. In the cottage I came across a pamphlet about a feud more than a century ago which had divided the village of Fanore, on the coast below the Burren. Based on oral memory and a lot of newspaper clippings, it told of how, at the beginning of the autumn term of 1914, Father Patrick Keran, a well-respected parish priest, arrived one day at the parish school and sacked the popular teacher Micheál O’Shea, after a blazing row between them. The teacher did not take it quietly and refused to move out of the tied cottage that went with the post. The school continued with the assistant teacher looking after the eighty or so children until, in the spring of 1915, a new teacher, Rowland Lee, arrived one Monday morning. He found his way into the school barred by O’Shea and a scuffle broke out. O’Shea summoned reinforcements from the local pub, where a wedding party had been going strong since the previous Saturday. Eventually two policeman arrived on bikes and arrested the rioters, including the best man and the bride’s father, only to find that none of the locals would help them transport the prisoners to Galway.

It took several months and more violence and intimidation before O’Shea was removed from the school house by bailiffs. The violence of many locals continued, however, and this meant that Lee could not move in but had to make a daily cycle journey under police escort from the relative safety of Ballyvaughan, eight miles away. O’Shea (who was supported by his trade union and kept his salary) now set up an alternative school in a barn on the edge of Fanore; most of the children went to his school and not to the official school. This stand-off lasted for seven years, with occasional outbreaks of violence (after Rowland Lee suffered a nervous breakdown and resigned, his replacement, made of sterner stuff, was beaten up and his house burned, but he braved it out, bringing in his sister as his assistant). A series of investigations by the Board of Education got nowhere because Father Keran refused to tell them why he had sacked Micheál O’Shea (technically he was within his rights to do so). So O’Shea was supported by the union and many but not all of the locals (others gave evidence about the violence at the government enquiries). Keran was strongly supported by the bishop, who conducted his own investigation, which exonerated him and blamed O’Shea.

In the end, at the height of the Civil War, an IRA local organiser convened a meeting of all parties (and all did attend) and imposed a solution: the IRA would find a new school for O’Shea, the bishop would find a new school for the replacement teacher, and the new parish priest would appoint a new teacher. It was how the Great Schism was solved in the fourteenth century. Peace was restored, at least until I asked about it in the pub and found that feelings still ran strongly on both sides. Local memories and contemporary newspapers were largely on the side of O’Shea. He was, he told all with ears to hear, the victim of clerical oppression and refusal to allow him to marry the love of his life, one Katie McDonagh, and to force him to marry his assistant, the ageing Delia Leonard (who then fled to London at the height of the crisis). Fascinated by all this, I set to work and found a huge file of correspondence from the School Board mislabelled in

the National Archives in Dublin, a generous bundle in the Trade Union archives and a smaller but revelatory set of papers in the ‘closed’ Diocesan Archive in Galway (sometimes it is useful to sport a clerical collar!).

It is a tangled story from which no-one emerges unscathed. According to the diocesan reports by investigators – appointed, it is true, by the bishop, but with witnesses from the village giving evidence, although menaced by neighbours – O’Shea was regularly drunk, even when in the school, on one occasion passing out by the side of the road on his way back from the fair. The girl he wished to marry was sixteen (he was thirty-five) and the marriage was opposed passionately by her parents. Delia Leonard swore that there had been no church pressure for her and O’Shea to marry and absolutely no impropriety in their relationship. In the end the marriage did go ahead, but with the curate recording his concerns about its validity in the register in case it fell apart and an annulment was sought (the marriage in fact thrived). Father Keran was a popular priest tirelessly helping the poor, but he stood too much on his dignity in refusing to give the real reasons for sacking O’Shea. He had in fact previously interceded for O’Shea when the teacher had asked the Board of Education for a merit award and been turned down.

So I concluded that it was a personality clash, exacerbated by a priest who regularly persuaded drunks to take the pledge. But then, late on, buried away in the testimony of witnesses in the Board of Education files I found evidence of something else again. Both Bishop O’Dea and Father Keran were Irish nationalists, but they were ‘moral force’ nationalists and supporters of the promotion of Irish language and culture. They were not ‘physical force’ nationalists and, it turns out, O’Shea was an activist for a movement strong in the west of Ireland, a radical wing of the Irish Land League. As a key witness put it: ‘he was a drunkard, but he was drinking with the cattle-drivers he was organising against the landlords’. This is what I now need to pin down.

So here is a story with sex and violence, clericalism and anti-clericalism against the backdrop of the collapse of British rule in Ireland, and of the War of Independence and Civil War, and of nationalist politics. When I sell the film rights, Selwyn will get 10%!

SCREENING FOR KIDNEY CANCER Professor Grant Stewart, Fellow and Professor of Surgical Oncology

Despite the kidneys being a critical pair of organs in our body, you may never have heard of kidney cancer. In fact it is the seventh most common cancer in the UK and, of the six more common cancers, only lung cancer, with its terrible survival rate, has a worse outcome. Most kidney cancers (60%) are found by chance. Typically, on a scan carried out for an unrelated symptom, the radiologist will identify a lump in the kidney. Indeed, as a consultant kidney-cancer surgeon working at Addenbrooke’s Hospital, one of the most common questions that my patients ask me is ‘why is there not a screening programme for kidney cancer?’.

That is a good question considering that, of all patients who have small kidney cancers which are completely curable by surgery, 89% are picked up by chance, with patients showing no symptoms (the ‘card-carrying’ symptom of kidney cancer is blood in the urine). Using approaches like robot-assisted partial nephrectomy, which I Grant Stewart with his ‘surgical robot’

undertake at Addenbrooke’s, these patients can be treated with minimal-access surgery preserving most of the kidney. In fact, these approaches are so beneficial to patients that I am leading a bid by Addenbrooke’s Charitable Trust to raise funds for a second surgical robot at the hospital.

However, there are two main roadblocks to screening for kidney cancer. The first is the risk of over-diagnosis and over-treatment of benign kidney lumps and other lesions in the abdomen that will never cause the patient an issue. Secondly, there is the considerable financial cost of setting up the infrastructure of a screening programme. This is all in the face of a cancer that is common, but not that common.

So what are the methodological options for kidney-cancer screening? This is an organ that is deep inside the abdominal cavity, closest to the back and generally surrounded by a layer of fat (suet) and, as such, can be quite challenging to find with ultrasound scan, which would be the cheapest way of imaging the kidney. In fact, an obvious way to start a screening programme would be to add it on to the aneurysm screening programme for men aged sixty-five, which uses ultrasound to assess the width of the aorta and to look for bulges with the potential for a life-threatening blood leak. While measuring the aorta with ultrasound is quite straightforward, finding the kidney and a small lump in it can be very challenging, especially as the personnel who undertake aneurism screening are trained only to undertake that specific task and are not highly-trained radiologists or radiographers.

An alternative would be to use a biomarker identified in the blood or the urine. Unfortunately there are no proven biomarkers for kidney cancer, despite the fact that a fifth of the body’s blood volume passes through the kidney every minute. And, obviously, urine is produced by the kidney, so one would expect any biomarkers to be readily available in the blood or urine. However, none have been validated so far.

Leeds Lung Health Check mobile lung-cancer screening unit

This leaves us with the option of a more detailed imaging approach in the form of CT scanning. However, this involves a dose of radiation, specialist equipment and a consultant radiologist. So, initially, this did not seem to be a tractable option for screening for kidney cancer. However, as lung-cancer screening using CT is currently being evaluated in the UK, adding an abdominal scan to look for kidney cancers to this existing programme seems like a viable option.

It was this thought process that led me to develop a close link with the team at the Yorkshire Lung Screening Trial (YLST) and discuss whether they and their funders, Yorkshire Cancer Research, would be interested in adding an abdominal CT scan to their study. In YLST, smokers and ex-smokers aged fifty-five to eighty are invited from across Yorkshire for a non-contrast CT scan of their chest. Patients are provided with smokingcessation advice, and researchers take blood to develop biomarkers for the identification of lung cancer. This all takes place in a mobile screening van, allowing people to attend screening close to home.

Over 6,500 people have attended screening for lung cancer as part of the YLST and outcomes for these people are being compared with the GP records of a control group of 31,000 people from the Leeds area who have not been screened. This is an ideal group to consider screening for kidney cancer, as people in this age range who smoke or used to smoke are at increased risk of kidney cancer. Professor Mat Callister, who is the chief investigator of YLST, was very interested in maximising the potential of the lungscreening trial and was very keen to support our study, which we named the Yorkshire Kidney Screening Trial (YKST). Yorkshire Cancer Research were equally keen to maximise the potential of the study, which they have funded now to over £6 million.

Last year we submitted a funding proposal for YKST to Yorkshire Cancer Research. After a round of reviews, YCR agreed to provide £611,000 to fund our study. Along with paying for the scans, we have used the funding for research staff for the mobile units and paid for the research time of a consultant urologist, a research nurse and a project manager. After the ethics committee fast-tracked our application, we received local approval in Leeds and started with participants in May 2021. So far, things have been going smoothly with a high acceptance rate for the additional kidney scan. We have been making findings in the kidney but also across other organs in the abdomen including the pancreas, the gallbladder, the aorta and the lymph nodes.

This is the start of a two-year screening period during which we aim to scan up to 6,500 people. The endpoints of the study are to determine whether this is a feasible way to examine the abdomen and kidneys and whether people will accept the offer of an additional scan in the context of a combined health check with lung cancer. The trial also provides us with an opportunity to test and refine the practical aspects of screening.

YKST will give us the best information to date on how commonly kidney cancer and other benign findings are present in the abdomen. This will be important information to allow us to develop the health economic arguments for kidney-cancer screening, which will in the end be the arbiter as to whether this is taken further.

If we get the signal that further research is warranted, the final step before presenting our case for consideration of kidney-cancer screening will probably be to undertake a randomised controlled trial within a national screening programme for lung cancer, whereby people will be randomised to either receive or not receive a scan of their abdomen at the same time as their lung scan. We will thus be able to determine if there is a survival advantage to people who have kidney cancer picked up within the screening programme versus those who eventually have it detected by chance and go through the existing clinical pathways. It is very unlikely that kidney-cancer screening would ever be approved as a stand-alone screening test and therefore this combined health check approach will most likely gather traction over the forthcoming years (kidney cancer is less common than those conditions for which there are currently national screening programmes: cervical cancer, breast cancer, colon cancer and aortic aneurysms).

Developing YKST has been a massive team effort with colleagues from across urology, radiology, public health and primary care contributing to the research. It is an area of great interest within our speciality and to patients. If you would like to know more, please do not hesitate to contact me (gds35@cam.ac.uk) or look at our website: cambridge-urologicalmalignancies.org.uk.

A SNAPSHOT OF THE COMMON LAW IN ACTION – A DUTY OF CARE TO BREACH CONFIDENTIALITY? Dr Janet O’Sullivan, Vice-Master and University Senior Lecturer in Law

In April 2020, I gave the first ever Fellows’ Evening delivered by Zoom, in which I offered a snapshot of a desperately sad ‘wrongful birth’ case, ABC v St George’s Healthcare NHS Trust and others [2020] EWHC 455 (QB), and used it to illuminate some characteristic features of the common law.

The facts of the case are as complex as they are tragic, but in essence X, the father of the claimant (C), was committed to a psychiatric hospital having killed C’s mother, where he was diagnosed as suffering from Huntington’s disease (HD). HD is a degenerative neurological condition caused by a genetic abnormality, with symptoms generally beginning in middle age. Anyone with the abnormality inevitably develops HD and each of their children has a 50% risk of inheriting the abnormality and thus developing it. X’s diagnosis therefore had profound significance for C, but X refused to

consent to it being revealed to her. His consultant psychiatrist, Dr O, and the whole medical team, agonised whether to breach their patient’s confidentiality, balancing the interests of C and X as their professional guidance required, and decided not to. The team then learned that C was pregnant. Dr O continued to respect X’s confidentiality but urged him to reveal his HD diagnosis, which by then had been confirmed by a genetic test. C only learnt of it after the birth of her baby. Three years later C also tested positive for the HD genetic abnormality (and thus her child was at 50% risk), at which point she was expected to develop symptoms within a decade. C sued, alleging negligence by Dr O and team in not disclosing X’s condition at a stage that would have allowed her to undergo genetic testing and terminate her pregnancy, which she alleged she would have done.

Before we consider the trial and its outcome, we can already notice some characteristic common-law features. First, as is usual, the principal defendant was in fact the NHS Trust employing Dr O and his team, which would be ‘vicariously liable’ for any negligence found to have been committed by its employees and thus for any damages awarded. Secondly, though vigorously contesting liability, the defendant had agreed C’s quantum of damages of £345,000, were it to be found liable (parties often have areas of common ground, which they agree in advance of litigation). This means that we cannot be sure how that desperately difficult calculation – to put C into the position she would have been in, financially at least, had she been informed of the HD diagnosis and had an abortion – was worked out.

The next familiar common-law feature is that the trial of the negligence claim was not its first outing in court. A negligence claim has a number of elements, which the claimant must prove in order to succeed. Somewhat simplified, they are that the defendant owed the claimant a duty of care, that the duty was breached (by the defendant falling below the objective reasonable standard), that the breach caused the claimant’s damage (in the sense that it would not have occurred without the breach) and that it would be appropriate to attribute responsibility for it to the defendant. In the vast majority of claims, the first limb, the existence of a duty of care, is uncontroversial, but if there is any doubt about it, it makes sense for that question to be hived off and litigated first, as a preliminary question of law. After all, if there is no duty, the defendant cannot be liable, however unreasonable their behaviour. So, in preliminary litigation a High Court judge in 2015 held there was no prospect of C establishing a duty of care, but this was reversed by the Court of Appeal in 2017; having decided that a duty of care was arguable, the Court of Appeal sent the case back to the High Court for a full trial.

At trial, we see several familiar common-law characteristics in operation. The first is its forensic, highly detailed focus on the evidence from the witnesses and expert witnesses called by both sides, to establish precisely what happened and whether a reasonable consultant psychiatrist would have acted differently, and the related counterfactual question of, if so, what would the outcome have been.

More fundamentally, we encounter the doctrine of precedent, the principle that earlier decisions establish rules which bind later courts. That sounds straightforward, but it can be fiendishly difficult. For example, the courts say that if there is an existing precedent holding that there is a duty of care in your fact situation, they apply that precedent. If on the other hand your claim is a ‘novel’ fact situation that has never been litigated before, the question of whether there is a duty of care is determined by looking at various criteria, including whether harm was foreseeable, whether there was ‘proximity or neighbourhood’ between the parties, and whether for reasons of wider policy it would be ‘fair, just and reasonable’ for a duty of care to be recognised. Fine in theory, but no two cases are ever factually identical, so identifying a ‘novel’ claim is a slippery value judgement.

This tension was central in ABC. Of course it is well established that doctors owe a duty of care to their patients when treating them, prescribing, diagnosing and so on, but nobody had previously sought to establish that a doctor owes a duty of care to someone other than their patient, to break that patient’s confidentiality. Undaunted, C tried to argue that she was within existing duty precedents, for example by virtue of a doctor/patient relationship with Dr O’s team, because of her participation in her father’s ‘family therapy’ sessions. The judge agreed, but held that this did not help C – her allegation of negligence lay outside the ‘scope’ of such duty, since it could not ‘properly be characterised as badly performed family therapy’. So the claim was properly regarded as novel. At this point, the judge emphasised that the facts involved an unusually proximate relationship between C and Dr O, and one by one rejected all the defendant’s policy arguments against recognising a duty. For example, it would not put doctors in an impossible situation of conflict, since ‘it has long been recognised that the duty of confidence is not absolute’; nor would it negatively impact on the relationship of trust and confidence between doctor and patient, since a duty of care ‘would simply recognise and enforce the need for the balancing exercise already identified in the professional guidance’. C had established a duty of care.

But this was not enough for C to win. The common law’s jurisprudential obsession with duty reasoning obscures the fact that duty is just the first element of a negligence claim. The judge went on to hold that the duty had not been breached. Dr O behaved reasonably and logically in an agonisingly difficult situation; he followed professional guidelines and the advice of the geneticists, took account of competing views within his team and appropriately balanced the claimant’s pregnancy against fears for X’s wellbeing if confidentiality was breached. This detailed conclusion was bolstered by the fact that, when C’s sister became pregnant, C did not disclose X’s diagnosis to her. Acknowledging that she placed little weight on the point, the judge remarked that it would nonetheless be ‘unduly harsh to hold D [Dr O] liable in negligence for reaching the same decision as [C] did in relation to her sister’. Likewise the judge held that, even if C had established breach, she failed to establish causation (i.e. that she would have terminated the pregnancy if told the diagnosis), given the extremely tight timetable, how long it takes to go through genetic counselling and testing, how distressing a late termination is and, again, her response to her sister’s pregnancy. C’s claim failed.

The outcome reveals the final common-law characteristic, the limitations of adversarial negligence litigation. It cannot generate what many medical claimants really want – an explanation, an apology – which are the focus in more conciliatory European systems. The common law sees parties pitted against each other, C required to accuse Dr O of behaving as no reasonable doctor would in order to win. Meanwhile, the financial costs, to claimants and to the NHS, are enormous; so are the non-financial costs, the stress of years of litigation, C’s last years of good health. Many commentators argue that negligence litigation is entirely inapt for medics who seek to cure not make profit, others that medics should only be liable for conduct which involves the conscious breach of an

accepted rule. Meanwhile political calls for the reform of medical negligence gather pace. A statutory ‘no fault’ scheme for medical claims languishes unimplemented, and in any event would still require claimants to demonstrate underlying tortious liability.

The writer Matt Ridley has described the genetic test for HD as ‘the bleakest kind of self-knowledge: the knowledge of our destiny, not the kind of knowledge that you can do something about, but the curse of Tiresias’ (Genome (London: Fourth Estate, 1999)). Alas, an unsuccessful attempt to bring a common-law claim for damages compounded C’s personal tragedy.

INNOVATION AND THE PANDEMIC Dr Shaun Larcom, Fellow and Reader in Law, Economics and Institutions

A few years ago, together with Ferdinand Rauch and Tim Willems, we published a paper that measured the impact of a partial Tube strike on commuter behaviour.1 We found that those commuters who were forced to experiment during the strike were more likely to take a different way to work after the strike. Our results showed that the strike actually helped some people find better ways to get to work. For those who found better routes, the benefits were likely to be long-lasting, compared to the one-off cost of the disruption. However, for many others, indeed the majority of commuters we studied, the strike was nothing more than a disruption, and as soon as they could, they took their old routes to work.

This pandemic has taken a huge toll: four million deaths to date. Many more people have been hospitalised or suffered acute illness, and large numbers look set to suffer chronic illness. Others, particularly those at higher risk of serious illness, have lived, and continue to live, with fear and anxiety. To reduce the devastating effects of the virus, governments have imposed a variety of social-distancing rules. These institutional responses have saved millions of lives. For instance, Michael Greenstone and Vishan Nigam have estimated that social distancing in the early stages of the pandemic may have saved as many as 1.7 million lives in the United States.2 Of course, the socialdistancing rules have imposed many large costs themselves. Many have found themselves without jobs and many who were fortunate enough to keep their jobs found themselves in seemingly perpetual crisis mode. Many working parents had to balance an increased workload with home working and schooling. Many students faced significant, and ongoing, disruption. Many people have suffered anxiety and depression, feeling cut-off and isolated. Many families and friends have been separated.

Despite the enormous costs from the (far from exhaustive) list above, the pandemic has forced us to experiment, and sometimes to find better ways of doing things. For example, together with Luca Panzone and Po-Wen She, we studied the impact of the first UK lockdown on food retailers and found preliminary evidence of a permanent shift towards online retailing. We concluded that:

This shock may have allowed consumers to find better ways of sourcing food and other products by triggering searches for alternative suppliers, and modes of sale and delivery. That is, some otherwise satisficing consumers were forced to experiment. Hence, this shock has the potential to lead to lasting changes in behaviour, some of which may produce large benefits to consumers and innovative retailers.3

We are not alone in finding the potential for permanent, welfare-enhancing innovations. More flexible work practices and the use of online media, in a variety of different industries and sectors, seem here to stay.4 Other important areas of innovation relate to the design of buildings, cities and the mode and use of transportation.5

Just like the 2014 Tube strike, many people currently wish to go back to the old ways of doing things as soon as they can. It is true that some of the innovations that we have developed and experienced in response to the virus and lockdowns are inferior to what we had before and are likely to be temporary. But for many others it is too early to tell. It will take time, and evidence-based analysis, to sort out what to throw away and what to keep. One thing that we should not assume is that those innovations that enhance welfare will be kept, and those that do not, will not. This is because the costs and benefits of many innovations are likely to fall unevenly, and we can expect that those who stand to lose from them will resist permanent change.6 We can go on to argue that if we do wish to see permanent welfare-enhancing innovations, we need to better understand the distributional impacts and share the gains widely. However, it must also be acknowledged that not everyone has an equal say in the many processes of deciding what to throw away and what to keep, and it is likely that without due attention to equality and justice, the voices of the marginalised and disadvantaged will be heard faintly at best.

No doubt, we all miss much from the pre-Covid world. But let us face it, it was an imperfect one. We currently have a chance to improve our world; not just by adopting welfare-enhancing technical innovations, but by also innovating to make it fairer, kinder and more sustainable. PART THREE

1 S Larcom, F Rauch & T Willems, ‘The benefits of forced experimentation: striking evidence from the London underground network’, The Quarterly Journal of Economics, 132 (2017) 2019-55. 2 M Greenstone & V Nigam, ‘Does social distancing matter?’ University of Chicago, Becker Friedman Institute for Econonomics Working Paper, 2020-26 (2020). 3 L A Panzone, S Larcom & P W She, ‘Estimating the impact of the COVID-19 shock on UK food retailers and the restaurant sector’, Global Food Security, 100495 (2021), p. 6. 4 J M Barrero, N Bloom & S J Davis, ‘Why working from home will stick’ (No. w28731), National Bureau of Economic Research (2021). 5 M Acuto et al., ‘Seeing COVID-19 through an urban lens’, Nature Sustainability, 3 (2020) 977-8. 6 Acuto, Larcom, Rauch and Willems, ‘What we learned from the pandemic’, IEEE Spectrum (2021).